Sound of the Underground review – magnificent explosion of mesmerising drag

Royal Court, London
A plot to kill RuPaul for dragging drag into the mainstream, followed by song and dance numbers, fires up an exhilarating show with breathtaking costumes, radical politics and filthy humour

It takes some time for Travis Alabanza’s show about the underground drag scene to set alight. But once it does, somewhere in the later part of the first act – after the awkward early scenes – it is a magnificent explosion of burlesque, feather boas, radical politics, pain, anger, filthy humour and breathtaking drag.

Co-created and directed by Debbie Hannan, the fire lies in the song and dance numbers, thunderous in their power, that come in the second act. But before that there are discussions on the state of the art today. Issues such as low pay and unionisation are flagged up, a little woodenly, but the show begins to bare its heart as the set is dismantled to reveal the naked walls of the theatre beyond.

With this, performers begin lip-syncing to voiceovers of their own words or each other’s and it feels like a supportive act – the emotional burden of their words shared – but contains its own masquerade. The effect is mesmerising and moving. They reflect on victimisation, precarious wages and the love of their art. Many in the underground scene wind up homeless, says one voice. There is diversity among the eight performers with a drag king and cis queen among them, and they make clear that this mainstream theatre space is not their natural habitat – they are invited, somewhat equivocal, guests.

What leads much of their narrative is an only half-jokey plot to kill RuPaul. He might be an icon, they say, but dragging drag into the mainstream has led to vapid commercialisation, and a sanitised version of the form, shorn of its politics and radical interrogations. We as consumers can simply enjoy its playful aesthetics without deeper engagement. This message hits home in the final act when drag king Chiyo stops their adrenalised performance to speak of how their body is admired by (often straight) audiences inside a club but becomes the source of trans danger and derision outside it.

Each act in the second half is as exquisite and exhilarating as the next, showing us that drag is as much about dream, fantasy and dress-up as escape, liberation and self-expression through masquerade. There is a stunning strip-tease with fans by Lilly SnatchDragon, burlesque infused with messages on decolonisation by Mwice Kavindele as Sadie Sinner the Songbird, a song filled with operatic grandeur by Ms Sharon Le Grand and a charismatic act by Wet Mess combining Tudor dress with luminous trainers and sinister clown face. Sound (Alexandra Faye Braithwaite) and lighting (Simisola Majekodunmi) too come with a drama which might befit the Moulin Rouge, and there is breathtaking creativity in every costume.

Sue Gives A Fuck, acting as compere, speaks of the sadness and joy in drag. There is certainly sadness in this show, sudden and gut-wrenching but the joy of performance too, and it is a sheer joy to watch.

Contributor

Arifa Akbar

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Yummy: Iconic review – drag burlesque gets a bit too cheeky
The acrobatic feats of Jarred Dewey go some way to redeem a show that’s way too high on cliches and exposed buttocks

Brian Logan

18, Jul, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
Sexual Consent Santa is coming to town! Taylor Mac’s drag queen Christmas
With a Virgin Mary strip show, lessons in how to sit on Santa’s lap and a carol about drugs, this festive extravaganza is about as alternative as Christmas can get. Is Britain ready for the New York legend’s show?

Alex Needham

07, Dec, 2021 @3:39 PM

Article image
How a 24-hour drag show predicted the past seven years in America
Just before Trump’s election, Taylor Mac staged a spectacular queer history of the US that was mysteriously prophetic about the culture wars that would follow

Lois Beckett

30, Jun, 2023 @10:26 AM

Article image
The week in theatre: Sound of the Underground; Lemons Lemons Lemons Lemons Lemons – review
Travis Alabanza and friends joyously return drag to its radical roots, while Aidan Turner and Jenna Coleman keep it brief in Sam Steiner’s social media allegory

Susannah Clapp

05, Feb, 2023 @10:30 AM

Article image
Teen drag queen musical Everybody’s Talking About Jamie to become movie
British stage success’s big screen transfer to be made by Warp Films and overseen by stage director Jonathan Butterell

Catherine Shoard

29, May, 2018 @11:07 AM

Article image
Everybody's Talking About Jamie review – drag musical from the Feeling frontman
Dan Gillespie Sells has a lot to offer musical theatre, but this Billy Elliot-style story about a northern teen drag queen lacks drama

Michael Billington

14, Feb, 2017 @11:55 AM

Article image
Tom Dale Company review – a mesmerising union of sound and movement
Jemima Brown excels in a cleverly assembled, four-way collaboration between choreographer, dancer, music and design

Lyndsey Winship

22, Mar, 2023 @11:18 AM

Article image
As Facebook blocks the names of trans users and drag queens, this burlesque performer is fighting back
Dottie Lux has been called ‘the real names crusader’ for helping fight back against a Facebook policy that queer users say is discriminatory

Sam Levin in San Francisco

29, Jun, 2017 @11:00 AM

Article image
We Didn’t Come to Hell for the Croissants review – wonderfully weird cabaret of the unexpected
Jemma Kahn’s show begins with a striptease, then ponders existential questions before ending with an orgiastic dinner party

Arifa Akbar

23, Jan, 2023 @9:18 AM

Article image
Bianca del Rio review – startlingly mean drag star loves to hate
Though the timing is spot-on, the comedian’s outrageous swipes at every sexuality, race and even disability descend to cliche as their wickedness exceeds their wit

Brian Logan

22, Sep, 2019 @10:16 AM